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The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Preface

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Letter to a patron, in John Hayes ‘Thomas Gainsborough’ (1980) p. 14<br />

We are all going to Heaven, and Vandyke is <strong>of</strong> the company.<br />

Attributed last words in William B. Boulton ‘Thomas Gainsborough’ (1905) ch. 9<br />

7.3 Thomas Gaisford 1779-1855<br />

Nor can I do better, in conclusion, than impress upon you the study <strong>of</strong> Greek literature, which<br />

not only elevates above the vulgar herd, but leads not infrequently to positions <strong>of</strong> considerable<br />

emolument.<br />

Christmas Day Sermon in the Cathedral, <strong>Oxford</strong>, in W. Tuckwell ‘Reminiscences <strong>of</strong> <strong>Oxford</strong>’ (2nd ed., 1907)<br />

p. 124<br />

7.4 Hugh Gaitskell 1906-63<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are some <strong>of</strong> us...who will fight and fight and fight again to save the Party we love.<br />

Speech at Labour Party Conference, 5 October 1960, in ‘Report <strong>of</strong> 59th Annual Conference’ p. 201<br />

It means the end <strong>of</strong> a thousand years <strong>of</strong> history.<br />

On a European federation, in Speech at Labour Party Conference, 3 October 1962: ‘Report <strong>of</strong> 61st Annual<br />

Conference’ p. 159<br />

7.5 Gaius 2nd century A.D.<br />

Damnosa hereditas.<br />

Ruinous inheritance.<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> Institutes’ bk. 2, ch. 163<br />

7.6 J. K. Galbraith 1908—<br />

<strong>The</strong>se are the days when men <strong>of</strong> all social disciplines and all political faiths seek the<br />

comfortable and the accepted; when the man <strong>of</strong> controversy is looked upon as a disturbing<br />

influence; when originality is taken to be a mark <strong>of</strong> instability; and when, in minor modification<br />

<strong>of</strong> the scriptural parable, the bland lead the bland.<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> Affluent Society’ (1958) ch. 1, sect. 3<br />

It is a far, far better thing to have a firm anchor in nonsense than to put out on the troubled seas<br />

<strong>of</strong> thought.<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> Affluent Society’ (1958) ch. 11, sect. 4<br />

<strong>The</strong> greater the wealth, the thicker will be the dirt.<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> Affluent Society’ (1958) ch. 18, sect. 2<br />

In the affluent society no useful distinction can be made between luxuries and necessaries.<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> Affluent Society’ (1958) ch. 21<br />

Politics is not the art <strong>of</strong> the possible. It consists in choosing between the disastrous and the<br />

unpalatable.<br />

Letter to President Kennedy, 2 March 1962, in ‘Ambassador’s Journal’ (1969) p. 312.<br />

7.7 Galileo Galilei 1564-1642

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